Sri Lanka overpower dismal Zimbabwe

Published November 23, 2008

HARARE, Nov 22: Two days after a senior ICC delegation turned up to assess Zimbabwe’s suitability for a return to Test cricket the country’s batsmen ruined everything by cobbling together only 67 runs in a backs-to-the-wall 31 overs in the second One-day International against Sri Lanka here on Saturday.

Their dismal nine-wicket defeat followed one that was barely better on Thursday in the first of the five-match ODI series when Zimbabwe struggled to reach 124.

They have thus made fewer than 200 runs in two innings while the tourists have required only five completed individual innings, leaving some batsmen short of batting practice and with others getting none at all.

Home skipper Prosper Utseya won the toss and decided to bat, defying the accepted tradition at the Harare Sports Club in taking the field.

It was, on the evidence of what followed, a bad move.

The Sri Lankans disdainfully knocked off the required 68 runs to win by nine wickets and go two up in the five-match ODI series.

Their score, reached just 10 balls after lunch, was 71-1 in 17.4 sedate and casual overs.

Zimbabwe brought in Sean Williams to bolster their middle order and he made 10 runs. Tatenda Taibu was top scorer with 12. The Zimbabweans lost their first three wickets for 22 and it was desperately uphill from there.

Ajantha Mendis took four for 16 in six overs while Farveez Maharoof captured three for 26 in eight.

Sri Lanka almost polished off Zimbabwe even before lunch.

They were just 16 runs short of victory when the umpires decided to take the break despite Upul Tharanga and Kumar Sangakkara, who were at the crease, wanting to deliver the coup de grace.

However, umpires Aleem Dar and Kevin Barbour chose bureaucracy and hunger over an even earlier conclusion to the match. In doing so they only just avoided a gathering rainstorm as the players resumed the field.

The two Sri Lanka batsmen made 29 and 26 respectively after Sri Lanka lost an early wicket.

The ICC visit, made by chief executive Haroon Lorgat and West Indies board president Dr Julian Hunte, will surely have to produce a negative report after this despite a cricket website predicting a whitewash.

Zimbabwe certainly appear no nearer Test cricket since they were obliged to withdraw from the five-day game more than four years ago when Sri Lanka, followed by England and Australia, refused to play Tests against them.

Several senior Zimbabwe players had been lost at the time following acrimonious allegations of racism and financial mismanagement. Several are now prominent in other countries.

The third ODI will be played in Harare on Monday.

Scoreboard

ZIMBABWE:

H. Masakadza c S’kkara b Maharoof 6

V. Sibanda c S’kkara b K’sekara 4

C.J. Chibhabha c K’gedera b Maharoof 5

T. Taibu b Mendis 12

S. Matsikenyeri c Thushara b Maharoof 10

E. Chigumbura lbw b Mendis 3

S.C. Williams c Maharoof b Mendis 10

P. Utseya c Sangakkara b Thushara 0

R.W. Price c J’wardene b Thushara 3

T. Mupariwa c J’wardene b Mendis 1

C.B. Mpofu not out 1

EXTRAS (LB-1, W-11) 12

TOTAL (all out, 30.6 overs) 67

FALL OF WKTS: 1-10, 2-19, 3-22, 4-34, 5-45, 6-48, 7-49, 8-64, 9-66.

BOWLING: Maharoof 8-2-26-3 (2w); Kulasekara 7-4-7-1 (2w); Mendis 5.6-1-15-4; Thushara 7-0-17-2 (2w); Muralitharan 3-2-1-0.

SRI LANKA:

W.U. Tharanga not out 29

M.L. Udawatte c M’kadza b Mupariwa 7

K.C. Sangakkara not out 28

EXTRAS (LB-2, W-5) 7

TOTAL (for one wkt, 17.4 overs) 71

FALL OF WKT: 1-19.

DID NOT BAT: D.P.M.D. Jayawardene, C.K. Kapugedera, J. Mubarak, M.F. Maharoof, K.M.D.N. Kulasekara, T. Thushara, B.A.W. Mendis, M. Muralitharan.

BOWLING: Mpofu 4.4-0-22-0; Mupariwa 6-1-18-1 (4w); Chigumbura 5-0-25-0; Utseya 2-0-4-0.

RESULT: Sri Lanka won by nine wickets.

UMPIRES: K.C. Barbour (Zimbabwe) and Aleem Dar (Pakistan).

TV UMPIRE: O. Chirombe (West Indies).

MATCH REFEREE: M.J. Procter (South Africa).

MAN-OF-THE-MATCH: Ajantha Mendis.

—AFP

Opinion

Editorial

Looking ahead
Updated 01 Jan, 2025

Looking ahead

The dawn of 2025 brings with it hope of a more constructive path to much-needed stability.
On the front lines
Updated 01 Jan, 2025

On the front lines

THE human cost of terrorism in 2024 was staggering. The ISPR reports 383 officers and soldiers embraced martyrdom...
Avoiding reform
01 Jan, 2025

Avoiding reform

PAKISTAN’S economic growth significantly slowed down to a modest 0.92pc during the first quarter of the present...
Charter of economy
Updated 31 Dec, 2024

Charter of economy

Before a consensus on economy is sought, the govt must resolve tensions with the opposition and reduce political temperatures.
Madressah compromise
31 Dec, 2024

Madressah compromise

A CLASH between the ruling coalition and the clerical old guard over the Societies Registration (Amendment) Act,...
Safety at work
31 Dec, 2024

Safety at work

PAKISTAN’S first comprehensive occupational safety and health (OSH) profile exposes the inadequacies of worker...